To all the women who have heard the frustrating “it’s all in your head” in response to medical maladies, a new study published on Friday feels your pain.
Research published in the Science Immunology journal showed that women actually do experience exacerbated chronic pain compared to men — a gap that could be explained by biological differences in the immune system.
“The pain of women has been overlooked in clinical practice, with the idea that it’s more in the mind, or that it’s because women are softer and more emotional,” lead author Geoffroy Laumet said.
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“But here, our study shows that the difference is real... it’s not a social construct. It has a real biological mechanism that is behind it,” Laumet added.
Pain occurs when neurons react to stimuli: stubbing your toe, or tripping and skinning your knee, for example. However, chronic pain persists with mild to no stimulation, and women constitute 60 to 70 percent of the people experiencing it, Laumet said.
He said his team set out to explore how hormone-regulated immune cells, known as monocytes, impacted pain resolution.
Researchers learned those monocytes play a key role in communicating with the neurons that sense pain — and then working to shut down those pain-sensing neurons by producing the anti-inflammatory interleukin 10, or IL-10.
Their studies were not originally aimed at exploring potential differences related to sex, but the data was clear: it took longer for pain to resolve in female mice, and the monocytes producing IL-10 were less active in them.
Those cells are more active in males, the study said, citing higher levels of sex hormones such as testosterone as an explanation why.
Laumet is hopeful the new research could open new doors to improved pain treatment.
In the long-term, research could probe how to stimulate the monocytes and boost IL-10 production to “enhance the body’s ability to resolve pain.” he said.
And in the short-term, he sees the potential for topical testosterone to prove a viable option to alleviate localized suffering.
University of California, San Francisco researcher Elora Midavaine, who studies chronic pain, said the new study adds “important nuance” to how we understand the interactions of hormones and the immune system, and their influence on pain.
Midavaine, who was not involved in the study, said it fits into a broader movement focused on intersections of neuroscience with immunology and endocrinology — an approach she said “has potential to advance our understanding of chronic pain in women.”
Laumet said he hoped that improved understanding and potential new treatment avenues could reduce prescriptions of opioid painkillers, which have high risks of side effects and addiction.
Both researchers voiced optimism that as knowledge of women’s health improves, they would receive better treatment.
“I hope that we can contribute to erase this common idea that women’s pain is exaggerated,” Laumet said. “The standard of care should be adapted to the sex.”
Why has it taken so long to begin understanding the bodies of half the population?
For decades, women were excluded from clinical trials, and most pain studies analyzing animals only used males, Midavaine said — a medical bias that operated on the notion that female hormones created “too much variability.”
Diagnosis of pain relies almost wholly on reporting from patients — and the symptoms of women are “often interpreted as emotional or mood-driven rather than rooted in biology,” Midavaine said.
“The landscape is changing,” Midavaine said. “As the science advances, I believe it will help shift outdated cultural beliefs and lead to more equitable care for women.”
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